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American Psychological Association Style for Final Manuscripts by Dr Abel Scribe PhD - Early Fall 2009
APA Lite for College Papers is a concise guide to crafting research papers in the style of the
American Psychological Association (APA). It is based on the current edition of the APA Publication
Manual (2009) while incorporating guidelines for Material Other Than Journal Articles found in the
last edition. APA Lite succeeds the APA Crib Sheet developed by Professor Dewey in the 1990s
and revised by the Abel Scribe collaboration in the current century. Doc Scribe is not affiliated in
any way with the American Psychological Association--this style guide is free!
APA Style Lite for College Papers 2009 by Dr Abel Scribe PhD.
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You are welcome to print, link, or distribute APA Style Lite for College Papers for notfor-profit educational purposes. Instructors are encouraged to use the guide in their classrooms. No
additional permission is required. APA Lite is revised on a regular basis; you are invited to link directly
to the document rather than post it to another site.
Copyright 2009 by Dr Abel Scribe PhD.
The writing style described in the Publication Manual of the American Psychological
Association (APA) is followed by over a thousand journals in psychology and education. Some
colleges and universities have adopted the style for student papers in all fields. It is an old style
and partial to tedious detail. Still, its widespread acceptance is in marked contrast to the
proliferation of styles in fields where it is not used. For example, authors writing in the field of
biomedical research must contend with literally hundreds of different journal styles.
2.2 Indents
Where it is required, you must get it right. A survey of journal editors, reported in The
Elements of (APA) Style: A Survey of Psychology Journal Editors (Brewer, Scherzer, Van
Raalte, Petitpas, & Andersen, 2001), found that most editors profess to rate the quality of a paper
over its presentation--its adherence to APA style. Even so, this was not a universal sentiment.
There appears to be a point where neglecting the style can lead to rejecting the paper.
3.4 Quotations
4.1 Percentages
Although most of the respondents (61%) indicated that they had never returned a manuscript to an
author solely because of failure to adhere to APA style, it is important to note that 39% of the
respondents reported that they had returned a manuscript to an author purely for failing to adhere to
6.2 Citations
APA style. (Brewer et al., 2001, p. 266)
The study asked the respondents to rate the categories most commonly observed deviating
2.3 Lists
4.1 Scales
from APA style. These were reported on a scale ranging from 1 (none) to 5 (a lot). The three
major problem areas identified were: (a) references (M = 3.23, SD = 1.07), (b) tables and figures
(M = 3.00, SD = 0.98), and (c) mathematics and statistics (M = 2.81, SD = 0.99). Problems in
these area had a direct influence on editorial decisions, and rightly so.
5.1 Tables
Table 1
APA Style Problems Areas Identified by Journal Editors
Frequency
Influence
Problem Area
Mean
SD
Mean
SD
References
3.23
1.07
2.27
1.39
Tables and figures
3.00
0.98
2.23
1.27
Math and statistics
2.81
0.99
2.31
1.32
4.3 Statistics
2.2 Block Spacing
Publication in research journals is highly competitive. Most journals publish only one
article in four submitted; top medical journals publish one in twelve. Poor adherence to the
required style handicaps a paper however brilliant the content. Editors screen these submissions
out. They are not passed along for review. These papers are dead on arrival at the editors desk.
3.3 Italics (Emphasis)
Figure 1. General features of APA style for final manuscripts. The figure follows the rules described in the Publication
Manual of the American Psychological Association (2009) as well as the suggestions found in chapter 6 of the previous fifth
edition of the Publication Manual (2001), Material Other Than Journal Articles. The numbers indicate the section in APA Lite
where more information can be found.
Dr. Abel Scribe PhD - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - www.docstyles.com
What features are most important when using APA style? This question was the subject of a research survey
of more than 200 psychology journal editors (Brewer, Scherzer, Van Raalte, Petitpas, & Andersen, 2001). The
editors reported that problems with (a) documentation (references) were the most serious, followed closely (b) by
problems with tables and figures, then (c) by the presentation of mathematical formulas and statistics. The editors
avowed that content was more important than style. Still, 39% reported rejecting a paper solely for failing to follow
APA style. Publication in top journals is highly competitive. Only one paper in four is accepted for publication; the
best journals accept only one paper in twelve. Sloppy workmanship is a strategy for failure.
1.
You must get your references right. A single reference that goes to the wrong source, or to no source, can
discredit your entire paper. Style and form are important to assure a reference is complete.
2.
The style uses a simple format for tables that is widely shared by other styles. Many word processor can
generate colorful and complex tables, but a simple and austere format is universally preferred in research
writing. Graphs are less common than tables, and images are rare, but they are not difficult to present.
3.
The APA uses nonstandard symbols in presenting statistics--just a few of the more common symbols are
presented in APA Lite. If you need to present your own mathematics refer to the APA Manual. Precise
numbers follow the metric system and international conventions.
These are all major features of the style. The APA Manual shows how to format references to 96 different sources.
The section on tables was so good in the last edition the Chicago Manual of Style referred readers to it (2003, p.
423). Mathematics and statistics are not covered as well as they could be in the Manual, but this shortcoming
illustrates the importance of clarity and consistency. When instructions are ambiguous follow your best judgment to
achieve a clear presentation and be consistent with that choice throughout your paper. Get the main features right;
seek clarity and consistency with the rest. APA style is a bit silly at times, but it is not difficult to master.
APA style is organized around three elements: (a) page formats, (b) text rules, and (c) documentation. Page
formatting concerns not only margins, indents, and spacing, but also the presentation of tables and figures, as well
as the organization of the paper. This is part of the final refinement of a manuscript. Text rules are at the heart of
what the APA Manual refers to as The Mechanics of Style (2009, chap. 4). These include rules for using
abbreviations, when to write numbers as words, and the presentation of quotations. For example, a sentence should
never begin with an abbreviation, a rule this paragraph cheerfully ignores. Think of these rules as you write. Finally,
the process of documentation refers to citations and references. Make this part of your research; take notes.
Grammar and punctuation are largely conventional in APA style. Any standard reference will serve.
Heading caps. A simple rule governs what words to capitalize in a heading or title, but when to apply the rule is
more complex. Heading caps are used with the first two levels of headings in the text, but not for lower levels They
are applied to the titles of books, chapters, and articles mentioned in the text, but all titles in references are set in
sentence caps. Heading caps are used for the titles of tables, but sentence caps are used for the captions of
figures. The required form is noted as needed throughout APA Lite. The term heading caps is an adaptation of
headline caps, referring to a style of capitalization used by newspapers (CMS, 2003, pp. 366-367). The APA Manual
calls this title case in a table note (p. 62). The Chicago Manual of Style makes no reference to this term.
Heading caps capitalize the first word, the first word after a colon; all words of four letters or more; and all
adjectives, adverbs, nouns, and pronouns in a heading or title. Articles, conjunctions, and short prepositions are
not capitalized. Capitalize all words of a hyphenated compound word.
Sentence caps capitalize a caption, title in a reference, or a heading as you would a sentence. Capitalize
proper nouns and the first word after a colon.
Full caps capitalize every letter. They are not used in APA final manuscripts, but are used for the running head
in copy manuscripts. Small caps are not used.
Heading caps are also referred to as headline caps from their early usage in newspapers. An example of their use is
the title of chapter 6 in the APA Manual (2001), "Material Other Than Journal Articles."
Bold fonts. APA Lite presents headings in a bold font, as specified by the APA Manual. It also places the title and
page header in boldface type for consistency, though this is not called for in the Manual.
Headings and DOIs. Headings and subheadings have a new format, far more sensible than the last (APA Lite,
sec. 2.3). Whats different is the confusion thats been eliminated. Digital Object Identifiers (DOIs) must now be
added to references when they are available, even when referencing print sources (APA Lite, sec. 6.4).
The title page is condensed in final manuscripts. Since the paper is to be read rather than typeset the title page
should carry as much information about the content as possible. The title and author share the page does the
abstract and author note for conference papers. The date is added to a published article by the journal; here it must
be added by the author. Keywords to aid online search retrieval are now added after the abstract.
Page Headers. Copy manuscripts carry a running head on every page. This becomes the page header in college
papers. The running head for publication is an abbreviated short title header--no more than 50 characters--that will
be placed at the top of each page when the paper is published in a journal. It is omitted from the title page of college
papers where it is redundant, and set in heading caps to conform with other headings in the paper (it is placed in full
caps when writing for publication).
Page Numbers. The APA Manual (2001) once noted that the position of page numbers on the first pages . . . may
differ from the position of numbers on other pages (p. 326). On the title page of college papers the page number is
relocated to the bottom center of the page.
The old APA Manual (2001) noted: If the paper is to receive masked review, also place the author note on the
title page, following the bylines and affiliations. The journal editor will remove the title page before sending the
manuscript out to reviewers (p. 296). For this reason, the abstract is placed on a separate page. Since final
manuscripts are not intended for anonymous review, it is sensible to add the abstract to the title page along with the
author note as a convenience to the reader.
Abel Scribe
Department of Arcane Studies
Transcendental College
April 1, 2009
Abstract
An abstract is not too common in student papers, but
required when submitting any paper for publication in an
American Psychological Association (APA) journal.
This is a good feature for students, especially graduate
students, to emulate in their work. An abstract is a brief
concise description of the research: what you were
looking for, why, how you went about it, and what you
found. Absent an abstract, proportion the title and
author block on the page. Abstracts to articles published
in APA journals are set in italics, a feature not specified
in the APA Manual, though perhaps appropriate for
conference papers.
Keywords: APA style, page format
[Acknowledgement] The author wishes to thank
Abby Scribe for her brilliant insights. Funding was
provided by the Ganja Pipeline Project.
[Contact Info] Correspondence concerning this
paper can be sent to Abel Scribe, Center for the Study of
APA Style, Transcendental College, Boulder, CO 80302.
Address email to abelscribe@aim.com.
1
Figure 2. Title pages for college and conference papers. The title pages shown differ significantly from that shown in the APA
Manual for copy manuscripts. Block spacing is used (single space within blocks of text, double space between blocks); title,
author, abstract, and author note are combined on a single page.
Dr. Abel Scribe PhD - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - www.docstyles.com
Abstract. An abstract should reveal in concise terms what you studied and why, how you went about it, what you
found, and the relevance of those findings. Type the abstract itself as a single paragraph without paragraph
indentation (APA, 2009, p. 27). The maximum length varies by journal, usually 150 to 250 words. Keywords follow
the abstract.
Author Note. There are four elements to the author note in copy manuscripts: (a) the authors name and (b)
affiliation (department and institution), (c) acknowledgments and disclaimers, and (d) contact information. The
authors name and current affiliation follow the title in college and conference papersacknowledgments and
contact information need appear only on conference papers. Each element is presented as a separate indented
paragraph.
Acknowledgment. This is a catch-all paragraph for recognizing those who aided the author, and any conflicts of
interest or disclaimers. For example, if you are a paid consultant for a company providing a drug used in a study
this must be disclosed.
Contact information. This is the person designated to respond to inquiries, followed by their complete mailing
address and email address if appropriate.
Repeat the title on the first text page. The introduction to a manuscript does not carry a heading that labels it as
the introduction. (The first part of a manuscript is assumed to be the introduction) (APA, 2009, p. 63).
Serif Typeface Only!
1 Margins
NO Introduction
1/2 The APA Manual warns that the Publication Manual is not intended to cover scientific
Ragged
Space 2x
writing at an undergraduate level . . . . Instructions to students to use the Publication Manual Margin
should be accompanied by specific guidelines for its use [italics added] (APA, 2001, p. 322).
These needed guidelines are provided by APA Lite for College Papers, a free online webpage that
is also available in printable PDF format. An important feature of these guidelines is the sharp
distinction drawn between copy manuscripts and final manuscripts in the APA Manual.
1/2 Copy manuscripts have been described throughout the Manual. Their life span is short; they
are normally read by editors, reviewers, and compositors only and are no longer usable after
they have been typeset. Copy manuscripts must conform to the format and other policies of
the journal to which they are submitted.
Space 1x: Block Quotes - Tables - References
Space 1x
Final manuscripts, however, reach their audiences in the exact form in which they are
prepared. . . . A number of variations from the requirements described in the Manual are not
only permissible but also desirable [italics added] in the preparation of final manuscripts.
(APA, 2001, pp. 321322)
The APA Manual advises students to adapt the style for their class papers. It offers several
suggestions for preparing theses, dissertations, and student papers in a chapter entitled Material
Figure 3. First and subsequent text pages. The previous edition of the APA Manual (2001) advocated block spacing to
improve the readability of college and conference papers (p. 326). The text is double-spaced, but block quotes are single-spaced
within while double-spaced from the text. The same line spacing is applied to headings, tables, references, and figure captions.
Page Format
Margins must be at least one inch on all four sides of the page, wider left if the paper is to be bound. For shorter
papers do not use a binder, a single staple in the upper left corner makes the paper easier to read.
Page header & page number. The page header is an abbreviated title in heading caps (every major word is
capitalized). This is the revised running head found in copy manuscripts (APA, 2009, p. 229). The page header
goes inside the top margin a half inch above the text, next to the left margin (new with the 6th edition). The page
number aligns with the right margin; on the title page the number is centered at the bottom or omitted.
Number all pages consecutively--starting with the title page--whether the page number is shown or not.
Text Format
Typeface. The preferred typeface for APA publications is Times Roman, with a 12-point font size (APA, 2009, p.
228). This is a serif typeface, a typeface with small cross bars on the lettersTimes Roman and Courier are
common examples.
Ragged right margin? An unjustified right margin is called a ragged right margin for its appearance on the page.
Do not hyphenate words at the ends of lines, do not justify the right margin, leave it ragged.
Indent all text paragraphs--except the abstract and the first paragraph in a block quote--one-half inch. Hanging
indents in references are also indented one-half inch. There are special rules for paragraphs in block quotes.
Block spacing? Double space the text, but single space table titles and headings, figure captions, references
(but double-spacing is required between references), footnotes, and long quotations (APA, 2001, p. 326). Long
quotations--block quotes--are single spaced within and double spaced from the text. Titles, headings, and
references also follow this format.
Space once after (most) punctuation? (New!) Space twice after punctuation marks at the end of a sentence
(APA, 2009, p.88). Space once after initials--but not inside abbreviations--for example, the initials in Tolkein, J.
R. R. are spaced, but the U. in U.S. is not (see p. 88).
Level 1
Do not use the heading Introduction. Repeat the title. It is understood that all papers
begin with an introduction (APA, 2009, p. 63).
Level 2 Side Head in Bold Heading Caps
When top level headings run to two lines single-space within the heading, double-space
before and after (see the top of the page). Use (a) paragraph seriation or (b) sentence seriation to
further organize your paper, anywhere in the text.
1.
Seriation
Paragraph seriation lists single sentences or paragraphs numbered with arabic numerals and
Sentence seriation (a) lists topics or categories within sentences, with (b) each preceded by
This section explains what to keep in mind as you write: the use of abbreviations, required capitalization, adding
emphasis to words and phrases, and the presentation of quotations. APA Lite devotes a separate section to
numbers.
3.1 ABBREVIATIONS
Pedantic professors (and the Chicago Manual of Style) will note that acronyms are abbreviations that are
sounded as words (e.g., AIDS, NASA), while initialisms are abbreviations sounded as letters (e.g., ATM, FBI). The
term acronym usually suffices for both. Use acronyms to avoid repeating long familiar terms (e.g., APA, MMPI), and
use sparingly, only for terms frequently repeated throughout your text.
Explain what an acronym means the first time it occurs: American Psychological Association (APA).
If an abbreviation is commonly used as a word, it does not require explanation (IQ, LSD, REM, ESP).
To form plurals of abbreviations, add s alone, without an apostrophe (PhDs, IQs, vols., Eds).
Use periods when presenting an abbreviation within a reference (Vol. 3, p. 6, pp. 121-125, 2nd ed.)
Use two-letter postal codes for U.S. states (e.g., GA for Georgia) in references (write the state name out in text).
Use hr for hour or hours, min for minutes, s for seconds, m for meter or meters (all in plain text, no period, no
bold font).
When using abbreviations for measurements (e.g., m for meter) do not add an s to make it plural (100 seconds is
100 s), do not add a period (see APA Lite, 2009, sec. 4.2).
Use the abbreviation pp. (plain text) in references to newspaper articles, chapters in edited volumes, and text
citations only, not in references to articles in journals and magazines.
Do not use Latin abbreviations in the text unless they are inside parentheses. An exception is made for et al. when
citing a source. For example, "Smith et al. (2009) found monkeys measured higher in IQ tests than grad students."
Instead, write out the equivalent word or phrase:
cf. [use compare]
e.g. [use for example]
Do not use the traditional abbreviations for subject, experimenter, and observer (S, E, O).
Do not use periods within degree titles and organization titles (PhD, APA).
Do not use periods within measurements (ft, s, kg, km, lb) except inches (in.).
3.2 CAPITALIZATION
The general rule is to capitalize terms if they are highly specific--in effect, used as proper nouns. For example,
write the nineteen twenties (1920s), but also write the Roaring Twenties. Write the Great Plains, but also write the
central plains, and the plains of Nebraska (but the Nebraska Plains).
Capitalize formal names of tests, conditions, groups, effects, and variables only when definite and specific (e.g.,
Stroop Color-Word Interference Test, Group A was the control group). But do not capitalize names of laws,
theories, and hypotheses (e.g., the law of effect, the test groups).
Capitalize nouns before numbers or letters that indicate a specific place in a numbered series, but not before
variables (Chapter 4, Table 3, Trial 2, but not trial x).
Capitalize specific course and department titles (GSU Department of Psychology, Psych 150). But do not
capitalize the term when referring to generalities (any department, any introductory course).
Capitalize the first word after colon in all titles in references and in the text and in headings. In the text, if the
phrase following a colon is a complete sentence capitalize the first word.
When capitalizing a compound word capitalize all words in the compound (e.g., Double-Blind Trial).
Exception! Do not capitalize nouns that denote common parts of books or tables followed by numerals or letters
page iv, row 3, column 5 (APA, 2009, p. 103).
Heading caps capitalize all major words and all words of four letters or more in headings, titles, and subtitles outside
reference lists, for example, chapter 6 in the APA Manual (2001) is titled "Material Other Than Journal Articles."
Sentence caps capitalize the first word and the first word after a comma or colon when the phrase is a complete
sentence. For example, "This is a complete sentence, so this is capitalized."
Use italics for the titles of books, species names, novel or technical terms and labels (the first time only), words
and phrases used as linguistic examples, letters used as statistical symbols, and the volume numbers in references
to journal articles.
Add emphasis to a word or short phrase by putting it in italics (the first time only). Use this sparingly!
Add emphasis to a word or phrase in a quotation with italics, followed by the note [italics added] in brackets.
Note a word used as a word, or a foreign term, with italics, for example, hutte means hut in German.
Introduce a keyword or technical term (the neoquasipsychoanalytic theory), or identify endpoints on a scale (poor
to excellent) with italics.
Do not italicize foreign words that have entered common usage (e.g., et al., a priori, laissez-faire, arroyo).
article and chapter titles cited in the text but not in the reference list. For example, in Smiths (1992) article, "APA
Style and Personal Computers," computers were described as "here to stay" (p. 311).
Do not use quotes to hedge, cast doubt, or apologize (e.g., he was "cured"). Leave off the quotes.
3.4 QUOTATIONS
Reproduce a quote exactly. If there are errors, introduce the word sic italicized and bracketedfor example, the
speaker stttutured [sic] terriblyimmediately after the error to indicate it was in the original.
Copy manuscripts have been described throughout the Manual. Their life span is short; they
are normally read by editors, reviewers, and compositors only and are no longer usable after
they have been typeset. Copy manuscripts must conform to the format and other policies of
the journal to which they are submitted.
Final manuscripts, however, reach their audiences in the exact form in which they are
prepared. . . . A number of variations from the requirements described in the Manual are not
only permissible but also desirable [emphasis added] in the preparation of final manuscripts.
(APA, 2001, pp. 321322) No period here!
Authors are advised to adapt the style for college and conference papers. What changes are the
page formats and organization of the paper. Everything else remains the same.
Figure 5. Text and block quotations. Quotes 40 words or longer are formatted as block quotes.
Block quotes, quotations of 40 words or longer, are double-spaced from the text, single-spaced within. Indent the
entire block five spaces (one-half inch, 1.25 cm).
The first line of the first paragraph in a block quote is not additionally Indented; the first line of each paragraph
after the first is indented (see Figure 5). Add the citation to the end of the block quote after the final punctuation.
Block quotes may be single-spaced in research papers, but must be double-spaced in copy manuscripts
submitted for publication or review.
Shorter quotes, less than 40 words, are placed in the text in quotation marks. Longer quotes, 40 words or more,
are indented and single spaced as block quotes, without quotation marks.
Reproduce a quote exactly. If there are errors, introduce the word sic (thus) italicized and bracketedfor
example, the speaker stttutured [sic] terriblyimmediately after the error to indicate it was in the original.
When the author is introduced in the text the page number follows the quotation, but the date follows the authors
name. Smith (1999) reported that the creature walked like a duck and quacked like a duck (p. 23). The
abbreviation p. for page (pp. for pages) is lower cased.
Without an introductory phrase, the author, date, and page are placed together. For example, It was reported
that the creature walked like a duck and quacked like a duck (Smith, 1999, p. 23).
Edit quotes. Effective writing seeks to merge quotations into the flow of the text. Edit a quotation according to the
following rules (see APA, 2009, pp. 170171):
Change case/punctuation. Double quotation marks may be changed to single quotes, and the reverse, without
indicating the change. The case of the letter beginning the quote, and punctuation ending it, may be changed to
fit the syntax. For example, drawing on the sentence above, write: "Merge quotations into the flow of the text!"
Do Not write "[M]erge quotations . . . ." in APA style (but see Chicago Manual of Style, 2003, p.462).
Omit . . . Words. Words may be omitted from a quote as long as the original meaning is not altered. The
omission is an ellipsis, and is indicated by inserting three ellipsis points, three periods with a space before the
first, after the last, and between each period; between two sentences, four points are used. "Do not use ellipsis
points at the beginning or end of any quotation unless, in order to prevent misinterpretation, you need to
emphasize the quotation begins or ends in midsentence" (APA, 2009, p. 173).
[sic]. Obvious errors in a quotation may be corrected without making a special notation. But for an unusual word
choice, concept, term, or spelling, it may be appropriate to emphasize that the original is being quoted faithfully
by inserting the Latin term sic (thus), in italics or underlined, and in brackets, immediately following the term (see
APA, 2009, p. 172). For example, "the hapless students in the study sttutttered [sic] unbearably."
[Add note]. A clarification may be inserted in a quote. This is added in brackets at the appropriate place. For
example, the local authority reported "they [the Irish Republican Army] called for a cease-fire."
[Italics added]. Emphasis may be added to a quote with italics. When this is done a note must be appended to
the quote in brackets immediately after the change [italics added] to the quotation.
The English language is somewhat vague about the presentation of numbers. Therefore, most styles present
rules for using even common numbers, such as when to write a number as a word and when to write it as a numeral.
Precise measures are always presented as numerals in the metric system in APA style; nonstandard symbols are
used for some of its statistics. See the APA Manual If you are presenting your own mathematical formulas.
Spell out common fractions, common expressions, and centruries (one-half, Fourth of July, twentieth century).
Use words and numerals with two numbers in series (five 4-point scales) unless it creates an awkward
constructionwrite the third of five tests, not the 3rd of five tests (new).
Use combinations of numerals and written numbers for large approximate sums (over 3 million people).
Spell out all numbers beginning sentences (Thirty days hath September . . .).
To make plurals out of numbers, add s only, with no apostrophe (the 1950s).
When numbers below 10 must be mixed with numbers above 10 in the same sentence they should be written as
numerals. For example, write the students trying out for the soccer team included 5 girls and 16 boys.
Use numerals for numbers 10 and above, for exact statistical references, scores, sample sizes, and sums
(multiplied by 3, or 5% of the sample).
Use metric abbreviations with physical measure (4 km) but not when written out (many meters distant).
Ordinal numbers follow the same rules as other numbers. Spell out ordinals below 10: first, second, . . . ninth.
Use numerals for ordinals 10 and above: 10th, 43rd, 99th, and so on. Exceptionthe twentieth century.
Use the percent symbol (%) only with figures (5%) not with written numbers (five percent).
Put a leading zero before decimal fractions less than one (e.g., 0.25 km), unless the fraction can never be
greater than one, as with statistical probabilities (e.g., p < .01).
Use numerals for all numbers that denote a specific place in a numbered series, parts of books and tables, and
each number in a list of four or numbers (APA, 2009, p. 112). Write Grade 6 (but sixth grade); Trial 5; Table 6; page
71 (do not cap page); chapter 8 (do not cap chapter); 2, 4, 6, and 8 words in a series.
Use numerals for all numbers in an abstract, table, or figure.
Use numerals for all numbers that represent time; dates; ages; sample, subsample, or population size; specific
numbers of subjects or participants in an experiment; scores and points on a scale; exact sums of money; and
numerals as numerals (APA, 2009, p. 124). But, spell out approximate days, months, years (new). She has about
fifteen years remaining on her jail sentence.
10
The APA requires the use of the metric system in its journals. This is formally known as the International System
of Units, or SI (from the French Le Systme International dUnits). The lead authority on the SI in the United States
is the National Institute of Standards and Technology (free guide: http://physics.nist.gov/Document/sp811.pdf). The
APA would prefer you visit their website, www.apastyle.org.
SI numbers have three parts: the numerical value, the prefix (multiplier), and the unit symbol
(abbreviation). Each of these parts is strictly defined. The number 25.3 kg is an SI number.
Numbers are always formatted in plain text (no italics), there is always a space after the
numerical value (never a hyphen or other character), there is never a period after the units
(except at the end of a sentence) with one APA exception, the abbreviation for inch, in.
Numerical values are presented without commas in SI notation. For example, the distance between Chicago and
Denver is 1600 km (not 1,600 km). The km stands for kilo-meters. The prefix kilo indicates the units are multiplied
by 1000. There are about 1.6 km to a mile. If it is important for clarity you can note the conventional U.S. measure
in parentheses after the SI number: 1600 km (1000 miles).
There is always a space after the numerical value, and only a space. This can look awkward. For example, the
temperature at the beach was 25 C, or about 77 F today. There is a space after the numerical valuebefore the
degree symbol and temperature abbreviation. Conventional notation, 77 F, is not an acceptable SI number.
Common prefixes are k (kilo-, multiply by one thousand), M (mega-, multiply by one million), and m (milli-,
multiply by one-one thousandth [0.001]). For example, KVOD broadcasts at 88.1 MHz. A Hertz is a measure of
frequency, after a man by that name, so the abbreviation is capitalized Hz. A complete listing of prefixes is found
in the NIST Guide (1995, Table 5).
Units of measure are always abbreviated when presented with numerical values, but written out when noted in
the text without a numerical value. For example, a liter is about a quart; "It took 22 L to top off the gas tank."
Units of measure never take periods or other punctuation except at the end of a sentence.
Numerical values less than one are preceded by a zero. For example, one yard is 0.91 m, or about three inches
short of a meter. An exception is made for statistical values that by definition cannot be greater than one, for
example the probability, p < .05.
No hyphens, no periods! The SI is not subject to rules for compound adjectives. For example, it is proper to write:
She won the 50-yard dash. It is NOT correct to write: He was prescribed a 50-mg dose. We interpret this as a
-mg
single dose of 50 mg. However, it is interpreted as a 50/mg dose (i.e., 50
in SI notation); 50 units of something
per milligram of body weight. A mouse weighing 30 g (about an ounce) would require a 1,500,000 unit dose!
Nothing but a space is ever inserted between a number and unit of measure. The APA Manual is wrong in
presenting the example of a 5-mg dose (p. 111).
Exception. When an instrument is calibrated in U. S. conventional units these may be presented followed by the SI
measure in parentheses (APA, 2009, pp. 114-115). For example, the thermometer at the beach read 77 F (25 C);
the maze was laid out with a tape measure on a 3 ft by 3 ft (0.91 m by 0.91 m) grid pattern.
4.3 STATISTICS
Most symbols for statistics are placed in italics (exceptions are very rare). Nonstandard symbols are used for some
common statistics (check the APA Manual, Table 4.5, for a complete list of accepted symbols):
M or
= mean,
SD = standard deviation ( ),
Mdn = median,
2
SS = sum of squares ( ).
Descriptive statistics give summary information about a sample or population, such as the average (mean) or
standard deviation of some characteristic. For example, "Abigail Scribe has a GPA of 3.65, which is below the
average for students accepted at Ivy and Oak University (M = 3.85, SD = 0.21)." Descriptive statistics may be
presented in the text with the appropriate syntax (e.g., "a GPA of 3.85"). When referred to indirectly they are set in
parentheses, as with (M = 3.85, SD = 0.21).
Inferential statistics reason from a sample to the characteristics of a population, often expressed as a probability.
For example, "Abby Scribe has a chance of being accepted at Ivy and Oak University (p < .15), but counselors
2
advise her that her odds are not great based on last years applicants, X (2, N = 2247) = 2.81, p < .15 (one-tailed)."
Inferential statistics are presented in the text (no parentheses) with "sufficient information to allow the reader to fully
understand the analyses conducted " (APA, 2009, p. 116). The example is from the APA Manual (2009, p. 117):
t(117) = 3.51, p < .001, d = 0.65, 95% CI [0.35, 0.95]
The first number in parentheses is degrees of freedom of the analysis; 95% CI stands for 95% confidence interval.
Space mathematical copy as you would words: a+b=c is as difficult to read as wordswithoutspacing (APA,
2009, p. 118). Place a space before and after all arithmetic operators and signs ( = , < , > , - , + , etc.), write the
equation: a + b = c.
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Any type of illustration other than a table is referred to as a figure (APA, 2009, p. 125).. Word processors offer
an array of elaborate table styles, but APA style requires an austere format following a template or canonical form
featured in the APA Manual. Figures include graphs as well as photo images. Their use is discouraged in copy
manuscripts because they are expensive to publish. This is not a problem with college papers.
When presenting data in a table or figure drawn from another source that source must be referenced in the
table note or figure caption. The reference follows a special format that is undocumented in the APA Manual (2009)
but observed in examples of tables (pp. 129-149). Titles are presented in heading caps, authors names go in their
normal order and follow the title. Note the page number after the title in the reference to the book, and the use of the
pp. abbreviation in the journal reference.
Journal Article (from Figure 6)
Adapted from "The Elements of (APA) Style: A Survey of Psychology Journal Editors," by B. W. Brewer, C. B.
Scherzer, J. L. Van Raalte, A. J. Petipas, and M. B. Andersen, 2001, American Psychologist, 56, p. 266.
Book (Monograph)
Note: From The Analysis of the Self: A Systematic Approach to the Psychoanalytic Treatment of Narcissistic
Personality Disorders (p. 123), by H. Kohut, 1971, New York: International Universities Press.
5.1 TABLES
Figure 6 presents the same statistics, first in the text then in the table. Which is easier to interpret? Note, it is
APA policy to replace the standard deviation (SD) with confidence intervals in current publications.
There is a limit to how much numerical information a reader can interpret when presented in
the text. The following passage is from the original article:
Respondents cited references (M = 3.23, SD = 1.07), tables and figures (M = 3.00, SD =
0.98), and mathematics and statistics (M = 2.81, SD = 0.99) as the categories in which they
most frequently observed deviations from APA style. Similarly, deviations from APA style
in mathematics and statistics (M = 2.31, SD = 1.32), reference (M = 2.27, SD = 1.39), and
tables and figures (M = 2.23, SD = 1.27) were identified as having the strongest impact on
editorial decisions. (Brewer et al., 2001, p. 266)
The same information is presented in Table 1.
Table 1
APA Style Problems Areas Identified by Journal Editors
Frequency
Influence
Problem Area
Mean
SD
Mean
SD
References
3.23
1.07
2.27
1.39
Tables and figures
3.00
0.98
2.23
1.27
Math and statistics
2.81
0.99
2.31
1.32
Note. Values are mean scores on a 5-point scale (1 = none, 5 = a lot);
N = 210. Adapted from "The Elements of (APA) Style: A Survey of
Psychology Journal Editors," by B. W. Brewer et al., 2001, American
Psychologist, 56, p. 266.
Figure 6. Statistics from a survey of problem areas in using APA style. The same statistics are presented in the text and in
the table according to APA style.
The information in the table in Figure 6 presents a fairly clear ranking of the means of problem areas reported:
References 3.23, Tables and figures 3.00, and Math and statistics 2.81. The difference from highest to lowest is
0.42 points, almost half a standard deviation, which ranges from 0.98 to 1.07. This reflects a measure of agreement
among the editors.
The influence these problem areas have is less evident. The range of means from highest to lowest is just 0.08
(2.31 to 2.23), a trivial distinction when the standard deviation ranges from 1.27 to 1.39. Try to derive the same
interpretation from the data presented in the text. Tables are more expensive to render in print than text, so the
authors or editors of this published article likely opted to present the statistics in text format for that reason.
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Table Manners
Place tables close to where they are first mentioned in your text, but do not split a table across pages. (Tables in
papers submitted for review or publication are placed on separate pages at the end of the paper.)
Label each table beginning with the table number followed by a description of the contents in italics.
Do not change the number of decimal places or units of measurement within a column. "Use a zero before the
decimal point when numbers are less than 1" (APA, 2009, p. 113). Write "0.23" not ".23" unless the number is a
statistic that cannot be larger than one, for example a correlation r = .55, or a probability p < .01.
New! Report exact probabilities to two or three decimal places in preference to the p < .xx model when possible
(APA, 2009, p. 139). Write p = .035 in preference to p < .05.
Add notes to explain the table. These may be general notes, footnotes, or probability notes.
Footnotes are labeled "a, b, c, etc." set in supercript. They explain specific details.
Horizontal rules (lines) should be typed into tables; do not draw them in by hand.
New! Tables may be submitted either single- or double-spaced (APA, 2009, p. 141).
Each row and column must have a heading. Abbreviations and symbols (e.g., "%" or "nos.") may be used in
headings.
General notes follow the word Note: (in italics) and are used to explain general information about the table, such
as the source.
Probability notes follow footnotes. The are used when the p < .xx format is required by the nature of the statistic
"assign the same number of asterisks from table to table within your paper, such as *p < .05 and **p < .01" (APA,
2009, p. 139).
5.2 GRAPHS
A figure may be a chart, drawing, graph, map, or photograph. The APA Manual is circumspect in encouraging
the use of graphs since they are costly to produce in print. Figures are appropriate when they complement the text
and eliminate a lengthy discussion. There are additional instructions for biological data and scans.
Figure 7. Cases of Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome (HPS) confirmed in the Four Corners
states (Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, Utah) from 1993 through 2002 by quarter of onset of
symptoms. From "Hantavirus in Indian Country: The First Decade in Review," by R. Pottinger,
2005, American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 29(2), p. 42. Used with permission of the
author.
The bar graph illustrates the episodic character of this very lethal disease (the mortality rate is about 40%). The
outbreaks are contrasted with the low endemic or background rate in a manner that would be difficult to describe in
the text or a table since the time scales and severity vary.
Labels (axes). The graph meets APA standards for presentation and labeling the axes. The Y-axis, the vertical axis
on the left side of the graph, is labeled with the text in heading caps parallel to the axis (readable when the graph is
rotated 90 degrees clockwise). These are APA requirements. The X-axis, the horizontal axis, is self explanatory and
needs no additional label.
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Legend. The legend of a graph identifies what each line or segment indicates. In this case there is only one metric,
HPS cases, but the legend identifies periods of outbreak of the disease in contrast with periods when few cases are
reported. Legends must be presented within the dimensions of the graph, never outside it.
Caption. Figures (graphs and images combined) are numbered like tables, starting with 1 and continuing in whole
numbers through the text, with the word Figure and number in italics. The caption explains enough about the
content so the reader need not refer to the text.
A sans serif type (e.g., Arial, Futura, or Helvetica) may be used in figures [and tables] . . . to provide a clean
and simple line that enhances the visual presentation (APA, 2009, p. 228; see also APA, 2001, p. 191).
5.3 IMAGES
A picture is worth a thousand words. Illustrations, pictures, are expensive to print, especially color pictures, but
that is not a limitation with the word processors and inkjet printers used for final manuscripts. If it makes sense to
use a picture, do so. The picture in Figure 8 would be difficult to describe in the text, and would likely require a
specialized language to do so (bergschrund, cornice, crevasse, fall line, glissade, grade, talus, tarn) that would also
have to be explained. Capitalize Figure in references to an image or graph in the text.
Figure 8. Safe descent route, Andrews Glacier, Rocky Mountain National Park. The small dot above the bold solid line is a
party starting the 150 m vertical descent. Right (north) of the crest of the glacier the slope drops dangerously into rocks. Bum
sliding (sitting glissade) is the favored mode of descent on this popular outing. Andrews Tarn is in the foreground. Doc Scribe
photo.
Legend. A legend explains the symbols added to an image or provides a scale. This picture has been edited to
show a safe descent line (bold), the crest of the glacier (thin gray line), and the dangerous north side of the glacier
marked with the universal no-go sign. All of these markings show up well against their respective backgrounds;
important when labeling images. They need no further explanation beyond the caption. The legend should be within
the boundaries of the image.
Caption. The caption goes below the images as it does with a graph. The caption begins with the figure number
(graphs and images are both figures and numbered in the same sequence), followed by the title. Additional
information should explain the image. An acknowledgment of the source is required. This may be dispensed with if
you are the source, but adding that fact will dispel doubt.
Mapping the research design. Flow charts have been a required part of clinical research reports in medical
journals for several years. The APA Publication Manual (2009) features several examples of flow charts including
one for a clinical trial (fig. 5.3, p. 154) and one for a survey study (fig. 5.4, p. 155). Expect the APA to require these
charts for empirical studies in the future. They are a great addition to a theses or dissertation.
Matching text from the article. Even a seemingly simply research design can possess complexities that are
difficult to comprehend from a text description. Flow meet the need to communicate this information. The following
is from the text of the article
Of the 146 screened potential participants, 104 met eligibility criteria, and of those, 59 agreed to participate in the
study. A total of 59 participants were enrolled in the trial, and 54 (27 per group) were randomized (Figure 9). Six
participants had a large response during the placebo-run-in period and should have been dropped from the study
prior to randomization; however, they were erroneously randomized, 2 to study medication and 4 to placebo.
Because they had been randomized, these participants were allowed to remain in the trial and are included in the
intention-to-treat analysis. (Weber et al., 2008, p. 2636)
14
54 Randomized
27 Randomized to receive
Hypericum perforatum
1 Discontinued (travel too far)
2 Discontinued trial
1 Nonresponse
1 Rash
27 Included in primary analysis
Figure 9. Clinical trial of St. Johns Wort for treating ADHD. Flow chart of participants in the
randomized double-blind controlled trial of the effectiveness of Hypericum perforatum (St. Johns Wort) in
alleviating the symptoms of attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Adapted from Hypericum
perforatum (St. Johns Wort) for Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder in Children and Adolescents, by
W. Weber, A. Vander Stoep, R. L. McCarty, N. S. Weiss, J. Biederman, and J. McClellan, 2008, JAMA,
299, p. 2636.
15
Every time you make use of the work of another a citation is called for. This may be a reference to an idea or
concept, a specific finding, or a direct quote. The citation and reference not only give credit where it is due, but also
locate your work within intellectual community--making it a part of the dialogue of discovery. Each reference cited in
text must appear in the reference list; and each entry in the reference list must be cited in text (APA, 2009, p. 174).
A reference list is not a bibliography; only those works cited may appear in the reference list. The term citation refers
to the notation of a source in the text, a reference is the corresponding entry in the reference list.
Exceptions. Two kinds of material are cited only in the text: references to classical works such as the Bible and
Quran, . . . and references to personal communications (APA, 2009, p. 174).
Quality of Sources. Information comes in a variety of guises. Only that information that has been subjected to peer
review is considered the highest quality in scientific and scholarly research. A magazine becomes a research
journal by virtue of publishing material that has been favorably evaluated by a panel of independent experts. This
screening in top medical journals is fierce, fewer than one article in ten submitted survives to print. Government
agencies and private research groups are other useful sources of information. This information may be highly
credible but without peer review is of unknown quality. These sources are sometimes referred to as gray literature
(APA, 2009, p. 205). Everything else is, at most, data. For it to have scientific significance it must be analyzed,
reported, and subjected to peer review. The Internet is a great source of data.
Version of Record. For a very long time this issue was mute. The hardcopy print version was the version of record,
and for many this standard still applies. Now however, articles can be updated and corrected in their online
representation, or published electronically in advance of the print or the formal electronic version. When citing a
transient version note this in the reference and update it in your final draft (see Ahead of Print in sect. 6.4).
Almost all sources fit one of three basic reference formats--as periodicals, as books, or as edited volumes (which
are an amalgam of article and book formats). The exceptions to this are software manuals, data sets, instruments
and apparatus which fit neither format (why is a Great APA Mystery?). Technical reports in APA style are referenced
as books, a practice somewhat unique to this style.
DOI (Digital Object Identifier). The DOI system was developed to permanently mark and identify digital
documents. It is not unlike a library call number and URL (Internet Uniform Resource Locator) combined in its
application. Publishers are increasingly assigning DOIs to journal articles whether online or in print.
We recommend that when DOIs are available, you include them for both print [italics added] and electronic
sources (APA, 2009, p. 189). If the DOI is not available for documents retrieved online use the URL. If it is
available for a print article include it in the referencethe DOI indicates an elecronic copy is available somewhere.
Test the URLs in your references . . . . If the content is no longer available, substitute another source . . . or
drop it from the paper altogether (APA, 2009, p. 192). Journal editors do check references, instructors may as well.
If the document cannot be found it is not a source.
Periodical Format
Author, F. M., Coauthor, F. M., & Collaborator, F. M. (Date). Title of the article in sentence caps without
quotation marks [Notation]. Name of the Journal, Newspaper, or Other Periodical in Heading Caps and
Italics, Volume in Italics(issue number), [pp.] page numbers. doi:12.3456/abcd.123.45.6789
Barry, J. M. (2004). The site of origin of the 1918 influenza pandemic and its public health implications
[Commentary]. Journal of Translational Medicine, 2(3), 1-4. Retrieved January 15, 2005 from
http://www.translational-medicine.com/
Brewer, B. W., Scherzer, C. B., Van Raalte, J. L., Petipas, A. J., & Andersen, M. B. (2001). The elements of
(APA) style: A survey of psychology journal editors. American Psychologist, 56, 266-267.
Weber, W., Vander Stoep, A., McCarty, R. L., Weiss, N. S., Biederman, J., & McClellan, J. (2008).
Hypericum perforatum (St. Johns Wort) for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in children and
adolescents. JAMA, 299, 2633-2641. doi:10.1001/jama.299.22.2633
The volume number (but not number of the issue in the volume) is placed in italics, an APA trademark. Page
numbers of articles in newspapers or magazines take the abbreviation pp. (but not pages for journal articles).
Book Format
Author, F. M., & Coauthor, F. M. (Date). Title of the book or report in sentence caps and italics (Xth ed.).
Place of publication, State: Publisher.
Beers, M. H., & Berkow, R. (Eds). (1999). The Merck manual of diagnosis and therapy (17th ed.). Retrieved
from http://www.merck.com/pubs/manual/
Strunk, W., Jr., & White, E. B. (1979). The elements of style (3rd ed.). New York: MacMillan.
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Beers, M. H., & Berkow, R. (1999). Mood disorders. In The Merck manual of diagnosis and therapy (17th
ed., sec. 15, chap. 18). Retrieved from http://www.merck.com/pubs/mmanual/section15/
chapter189/189a.htm
It is typical to cite the specific content being referenced in an edited book or compilation, the article or chapter, not
the entire volume. This is formated like the title of a journal article. The page numbers are noted in parentheses
after the volume title which is formatted as a like that for any book. The rest of the reference follows the book format.
APA style uses the author-date or parenthetical system of citation. These have been used throughout APA Lite.
They take the form (Author, Date, Page [if relevant]). This must agree with the corresponding reference.
Placement. Citations to references follow their referral in the text. For example, American Psychological
Association journals use the author-date style of citation (APA, 2009, p. 174).
Text citations do not repeat information. If an authors name is mentioned in the text, it is not repeated in the
citation. If no specific page is cited, none is noted. For example, the APA Publication Manual (2009) is entirely
focused on preparing manuscripts for publication. The citation immediately follows the authors name.
Page numbers are required with all direct quotations. The citation comes immediately after the quote, even when
it is not at the end of the sentence. For example, changes to APA style are not only permissible but also
desireable (APA, 2001, p. 322) when preparing college papers.
When the authors name and the quote are separated, the citation is also separated. For example, the APA
Manual (2001) advises that changes to the style are not only permissible but also desireable (p. 322) when
preparing college papers.
Do not drop digits from (elide) inclusive pages numbers, do not write pp. 1234-38, write pp. 1234-1238.
Source
Citation
Source
Citation
No Author
Chapter
1 Author
Data File
2 Authors
In Press
(Adams, in press)
3/5 Authors
Message/E-Mail
6 Authors+
Multiple
Corporate
Acronym
No Date
Reprint
(Smith, n.d.)
(Freud, 1920/2002)
Three to five authors list all authors in the first citation; the lead author et al. (and others) in subsequent citations:
first, (Smith, Jones, Andrews, Baker, & Charles, 2001); next, (Smith et al., 2001).
Six or more authors list the lead author et al. in all citations.
Corporate author. If a group is readily identified by an acronym, spell it out only the first time. For example, "As
reported in a government study (National Institute of Mental Health [NIMH], 1991) . . . ." The next citation gives
just the initials and year, (NIMH, 1991).
No author. If the author is unknown, use the first few words of the reference list entry (usually the title), for
example: ("Study Finds," 1992). Use heading caps in the text when noting a title (sentence caps in references)!
Anonymous. If the work specifically carries the designation Anonymous in place of an authors name, use
Anonymous as the author. Otherwise, the work has no author.
Reprints cite the original publication date and reprint date if both are known, for example: (James, 1890/1983).
Translations of classics note the date of the translation: (Aristotle, trans. 1931).
Personal communication. E-mail and other "unrecoverable data" are cited as personal communications, for
example: (C. G. Jung, personal communication, September 28, 1933). These sources do not appear in the
reference list.
Always cite page numbers after quotations. For example, the author noted, "The rats fell asleep within minutes"
(Jones, 2003, p. 76). Or, Jones (1993) found "the rats fell asleep within minutes" (p. 76).
E-documents. When quoting electronic documents without page numbers, cite paragraph numbers if given, after
the paragraph symbol or abbreviation para. (e.g., Smith, 2000, 17). If there are no paragraph numbers, cite the
nearest preceding section heading and count paragraphs from there (e.g., Smith, 2000, Method section, para. 4).
17
If the citation is repeated in the same paragraph, the year may be omitted. For example (Smith et al., 2002, p.
22), then (Smith et al., p. 23).
Use an ampersand (&) in references and parenthetical citations only; write and in plain text, for example, Smith
and Sarason (1990) explained . . . . Or write: (Smith & Sarason, 1990).
If there are two or more citations that shorten to the same lead author and date, give as many additional names
as needed to identify them, e.g., (Smith, Jones, et al., 1991) and (Smith, Burke, et al., 1991).
When citing multiple works by the same author, arrange dates in order. Use letters after years to distinguish
multiple publications by the same author in the same year, e.g., (Johnson, 1988, 1990a, 1990b).
No. number
p. (pp.) page (pages)
para. paragraph
Pt. part
Suppl. supplement
Tech. Rep. technical report
Trans. translator
Vol. volume (as in Vol. X)
vols. volumes (as in xx vols.)
10
References
American Medical Association Editors. (2007). American Medical Association manual of style: A
guide for authors and editors (10th ed.). New York: Oxford University Press.
American Psychological Association. (2009). Publication manual of the American Psychological
Association (6th ed.). Washington, DC: Author.
Brewer, B. W., Scherzer, C. B., Van Raalte, J. L., Petipas, A. J., & Andersen, M. B. (2001). The
elements of (APA) style: A survey of psychology journal editors. American Psychologist,
56, 266-267.
Gibaldi, J. (2003). MLA handbook for writers of research papers (6th ed.). New York, NY: The
Modern Language Association.
Hypericum Depression Trial Study Group. (2002). Effect of Hypericum perforatum (St Johns
Wort) in major depressive disorder: A randomized controlled trial. JAMA, 287, 18071814.
doi:10.1001/jama.287.14.1807
Taylor, B. N. (1995, April). Guide for the use of the International System of Units (NIST Special
Publication 811, 1995 Edition). Gaithersburg, MD: National Institute of Standards and
Technology. Retrieved from http://physics.nist.gov/Document/sp811.pdf
Turabian, K. L., Booth, W. C., Colomb, G. G., Williams, J. M., & University of Chicago Press.
(2007). A manual for writers of research papers, theses, and dissertations (7th ed.).
Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
University of Chicago Press. (2003). The Chicago manual of style (15th ed.). Chicago, IL:
Author.
Figure 10. List of references in block format. References are arranged alphabetically by author. Block format single-spaces
within references, but double-spaces between references.
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[Special section]
[Monograph]
[Abstract]
[Video webcast]
[Audio podcast]
[Data file]
[Brochure]
[Supplemental material]
[Motion picture]
[Lecture notes]
[CD]
[Perspective]
Do not drop digits from (elide) inclusive pages numbers, do not write pp. 1234-38, write pp. 1234-1238.
The volume number in references to periodicals is placed in italics (but not the issue number, if any).
19
Seven authors:
McGlynn, E. A., Asch, S. M., Adams, J., Keesey, J., Hicks, J., & DeCristofaro. A., & Kerr, E. A. (2003). The
quality of health care delivered to adults in the United States. New England Journal of Medicine,
348, 2635-2645. doi:[add if available]
All citations: (McGlynn et al., 2003). In the reference list all seven authors.
More than seven authors:
Heshka, S., Anderson, J. W., Atkinson, R. L., Greenway, F. L., Hill, J. O., Phinney, S. D., . . . Pi-Sunyer, F.
X. (2003). Weight loss with self-help compared with a structured commercial program: A
randomized trial. JAMA, 289, 1792-1798. doi:[add if available]
All citations: (Heshka et al., 2003).
Ahead of print:
Han, K., Zhu, X., He, F., Liu, L., Zhang, L., Ma, H., . . . Zhu, B-P. (2009). Lack of airborne transmission
during outbreak of pandemic (H1N1) 2009 among tour group members, China, June 2009.
Emerging Infectious Diseases, 15(10). Advance online publication. doi:10.3201/eid1510.091013
All citations: (Han et al., 2009, . . .). Page numbers may not yet be assigned to these works. Use whatever
information is available: (Han et al., 2009, p. 3 of 9), (Han et al., 2009, Results section, para. 2) (see APA,
2009, p. 172).
Update your references close to the publication date of your work, and refer to the final version of
your sources, if possible (APA, 2009, p. 199).
Group author: Print, DOI, Internet references:
Hypericum Depression Trial Study Group. (2002a). Effect of Hypericum perforatum (St. Johns Wort) in
major depressive disorder: A randomized controlled trial. JAMA, 287, 18071814.
Hypericum Depression Trial Study Group. (2002b). Effect of Hypericum perforatum (St. Johns Wort) in
major depressive disorder: A randomized controlled trial. JAMA, 287, 18071814.
doi:10.1001/jama.287.14.1807
Hypericum Depression Trial Study Group. (2002c). Effect of Hypericum perforatum (St. Johns Wort) in
major depressive disorder: A randomized controlled trial. JAMA, 287, 18071814. Retrieved
[retrieval date] from http://www.jama.org/articles.html
Citation: (Hypericum Depression Trial Study Group, 2002). Cite the full name of a corporate author. The
print original does not have a DOI, it was added through an online cover sheet later.
The DOI (Digital Object Identifier) should be added to a reference whether you use a digital version of the
article or not. The DOI, when it is available, takes precedence over the URL when referencing a source
found online.
Reference the URL of the home page of the journal, not that of the specific document (APA, 2009, p. 198).
The retrieval date should be added when referencing other than the version of record, such as an updated
copy after publication.
Journals paged by issue (online):
Barry, J. M. (2004). The site of origin of the 1918 influenza pandemic and its public health implications
[Commentary]. Journal of Translational Medicine, 2(3), 1-4. Retrieved from
http://www.translational-medicine.com/content/2/1/3
Conway, L. G., III. (2001). Number and age of citations in social-personality psychology over the lifespan of
the field: Older and wiser? Dialogue, 16(2), 14-15. doi:[add if available]
Add the issue in the volume (in parentheses in plain text) to these reference after the volume number.
Regular column:
Coyle, J. T. (2003). Use it or lose itDo effortful mental activities protect against dementia? [Perspective].
New England Journal of Medicine, 348, 2489-2490. doi:[add if available]
A title notation in brackets, [Perspective], follows the title to indicate this is a regular feature of the journal,
and an opinion or observational comment rather than an empirical study.
Special issue or supplement:
Seligman, M. E. P., & Csikszentmihalyi, M. (Eds.). (2000). Positive psychology [Special issue]. American
Psychologist, 55(1). doi:[add if available]
Troiano, R. P., & Flegal, K. M. (1998). Overweight children and adolescents: Description, epidemiology, and
demographics. Journal of Pediatrics, 101(Suppl. 2), 497-504. doi:[add if available]
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21
22
The term "gender" refers to culture and should be used when referring to men and women as social groups, as in
this example from the Publication Manual: "sexual orientation rather than gender accounted for most of the
variance. Most gay men and lesbians were for it, most heterosexual men and women were against it" (APA,
2009, p. 71).
The term "sex" refers to biology and should be used when biological distinctions are emphasized, for example,
"sex differences in hormone production."
An ethnic label can be perceived as a slur if not managed correctly. For example, persons of acknowledged
Spanish heritage in the New World may prefer Chicano (Chicana), Hispanic, Latino, Mexican, Mexican American,
and so on. Historically, there are no American Indians, only members of specific nations, tribes, villages, and
bands. The term Native American is inclusive of American Indians, Pacific Islanders, and Alaskan Natives. Specific
group names are more informative, such as Hopi or Lakota.
Color. Capitalize Black and White when the words are used as proper nouns to refer to social groups. Do not
use color words for other ethnic groups. In racial references, the manual simply recommends that we respect
current usage. Currently both the terms "Black" and "African American" are widely accepted, while "Negro" and
"Afro-American" are not. These things change, so use common sense.
Hispanic. The terms Hispanic, Latino, and Chicano are preferred by different groups. The safest procedure is
use geographical references; use "Cuban American" if referring to people from Cuba.
Asian. The term Asian American is preferable to Oriental, and again the manual recommends being specific
about country of origin, when this is known (for example, Chinese or Vietnamese). The manual specifies that
hyphens should not be used in multiword names such as Asian American or African American.
Indigenous. Some people from northern Canada, Alaska, eastern Siberia, and Greenland often (but not
always!) prefer Inuk (singular) and Inuit (plural) to "Eskimo." But some Alaska natives are non-Inuit people who
prefer to be called Eskimo, while others are Athabaskans of an entirely different heritage. Difficulty may be
avoided by using geographical references. For example, in place of "Eskimo" or "Inuit" one could use
"indigenous people from northern Canada, northern Alaska, eastern Siberia, and Greenland."
Age. In referring to age, be specific about age ranges; avoid open-ended definitions like "under 16" or "over 65."
Avoid the term elderly. Older person is preferred. The American Medical Association Manual of Style, p. 263,
Chicago, IL: Author, 1997, uses these definitions:
Neonates or newborns are persons from birth to 1 month of age.
Infants are children [sic] aged 1 month to 1 year.
Children are persons aged 1 to 12 years. . . . They may also be referred to as boys or girls.
Adolescents are persons aged 13 through 17 years; also teenagers, adolescent boys, or adolescent girls.
Adults are persons over 18 years and are referred to as men or women.
DO NOT use . . .
In general, call people what they want to be called, and do not contrast one group of people with another
group called "normal." Write "we compared people with autism to people without autism" not "we contrasted
autistics to normals."